(Press-News.org) A team led by researchers at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, has succeeded in identifying biomarkers for Parkinson’s disease in its earliest stages, before extensive brain damage has occurred. The biological processes leave measurable traces in the blood, but only for a limited period. The discovery thus reveals a window of opportunity that could be crucial for future treatment, but also for early diagnosis via blood tests, which could begin to be tested in healthcare within five years.
Parkinson’s is an endemic disease with over 10 million people affected globally. As the world’s population grows older, this number is expected to more than double by 2050. At present, there is neither an effective cure nor an established screening method for detecting this chronic neurological disorder at an early stage before it has caused significant damage to the brain.
In a new study published in npj Parkinson’s Disease, a research team from Chalmers University of Technology and Oslo University Hospital, Norway, reports on decisive steps towards an early diagnosis of Parkinson’s.
“By the time the motor symptoms of Parkinson’s disease appear, 50 – 80 per cent of the relevant brain cells are often already damaged or gone. The study is an important step towards facilitating early identification of the disease and counteracting its progression before it has gone this far,” says Danish Anwer, a doctoral student at the Department of Life Sciences at Chalmers and the study’s first author.
Important window of opportunity discovered
In the study, the researchers focused on two processes thought to be involved in the very early phase of the disease, which can last up to 20 years in Parkinson’s patients before motor symptoms are fully developed. One of the processes is the body’s DNA damage repair, which is the cells’ built-in system for detecting and correcting damage. The second is the cells’ stress response, a survival reaction activated by threats, in which cells prioritise repair and protection by pausing normal functions.
The researchers used machine learning and other techniques to discover a pattern of distinct gene activities linked to DNA damage repair and stress response in patients in the early phase of Parkinson’s disease. This pattern was not found in either healthy individuals or diagnosed patients who already had symptoms.
“This means that we have found an important window of opportunity in which the disease can be detected before motor symptoms caused by nerve damage in the brain appear. The fact that these patterns only show at an early stage and are no longer activated when the disease has progressed further also makes it interesting to focus on the mechanisms to find future treatments,” says Annikka Polster, Assistant Professor at the Department of Life Sciences at Chalmers, who led the study.
In the intense global research into Parkinson’s disease, several other biological indicators of the early stage of the disease have been examined, including those linked to brain imaging or brain fluid analyses. However, validated tests suitable for widespread screening to detect the disease before symptoms appear are not yet available.
“In our study, we highlighted biomarkers that likely reflect some of the early biology of the disease and showed they can be measured in blood. This paves the way for broad screening tests via blood samples: a cost-effective, easily accessible method,” says Polster.
Hoping for blood tests in healthcare in a few years
In the next stage, the researchers will try to understand exactly how the mechanisms activated in the early stage of the disease work, and develop tools to make it even easier to detect them.
Within five years, the research team believes that blood tests for early diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease could begin to be tested in healthcare. In the longer term, it is hoped that the research will also contribute to the development of drugs to prevent or treat the disease.
“If we can study the mechanisms as they happen, it could provide important keys to understanding how they can be stopped and which drugs might be effective. This may involve new drugs, but also drug repurposing, where we can use drugs developed for diseases other than Parkinson’s because the same gene activities or mechanisms are active,” says Polster.
More about the scientific article:
The study Longitudinal assessment of DNA repair signature trajectory in prodromal versus established Parkinson’s disease has been published in npj Parkinson’s Disease. The authors are Danish Anwer, Nicola Pietro Montaldo, Elva Maria Novoa-del-Toro, Diana Domanska, Hilde Loge Nilsen and Annikka Polster. The researchers work at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, and Oslo University Hospital, Norway.
The research has been funded by Chalmers Health Engineering Area of Advance, Sweden, the Michael J Fox Foundation, the Research Council of Norway, NAISS (National Academic Infrastructure for Supercomputing in Sweden) and the Swedish Research Council.
More about Parkinson’s disease
Parkinson’s disease is a neurological disorder that makes it difficult for the brain to control the nerve signals that control movement. The disease develops slowly and usually starts after the age of 55 – 60. Parkinson’s disease is the second most common neurodegenerative disease worldwide, after Alzheimer’s. Worldwide, there are more than 10 million people who have been diagnosed with the disorder, and the number is expected to more than double by 2050.
Sources: The Swedish Parkinson's Association, The BMJ, global projection study, 2024
Parkinson’s disease – symptoms and disease progression
Early symptoms
REM sleep behaviour disorder: The person acts out dreams during REM sleep, often with movements or sounds.
Reduced sense of smell
Constipation
Depression
Anxiety
Motor symptoms, later in the progression of the disease
Slow movements
Rigidity and instability
Tremors
Involuntary muscle contractions END
Early signs of Parkinson’s can be identified in the blood
2026-01-29
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Reducing drug deaths from novel psychoactive substances relies on foreign legislation, but here’s how it can be tackled closer to home
2026-01-29
by Ric Treble and Caroline Copeland
The illicit drug trade is international, and different countries have developed different strategies intended to minimize its negative effects, most commonly through controls on, or prohibition of, specified substances. But which approaches to banning substances are actually most effective in reducing harm?
The advent of NPS, and the range of subsequent legislative controls introduced by different countries, has created a natural experiment. Using data from the UK’s National Programme on Substance Abuse Mortality ...
Conveying the concept of blue carbon in Japanese media: A new study provides insights
2026-01-29
Blue carbon refers to organic carbon captured and stored by the marine and vegetated coastal ecosystems such as mangrove forests, salt marshes, and seagrass meadows. These ecosystems act as powerful carbon sinks, sequestering carbon from the atmosphere efficiently like terrestrial forests. Recent focus on marine conservation has identified the blue carbon concept as an important factor, contributing to climate change mitigation and adaptation.
While there is a rising interest in blue carbon among businesses and ...
New Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution study cautions that deep-sea fishing could undermine valuable tuna fisheries
2026-01-29
Woods Hole, Mass. (January 28, 2026) — A new study led by scientists at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), along with international partners, finds that proposed commercial fishing in the deep ocean could have serious consequences for bigeye tuna, one of the world’s most valuable and widely consumed fish.
The study in Fisheries Management and Ecology shows that large-scale harvesting of mesopelagic fish –small, deep-sea species that live hundreds of meters below the surface –could reduce the food available to bigeye tuna, ultimately harming tuna populations ...
Embedding critical thinking from a young age
2026-01-29
Education systems need to focus more on independent critical thinking and rational, evidence-based learning and problem-solving to find answers to many of the unprecedented environmental, social and economic challenges facing humanity, experts say.
Scientists from around the world, including Flinders University microbiologist Dr Jake Robinson, have called for a radical refocus of school curricula from early years to high school to include more critical thinking and learning skills to empower students to ‘think outside the box’.
“Cultivating deep, critical and systems-oriented thinking is no longer optional (but) ...
Study maps the climate-related evolution of modern kangaroos and wallabies
2026-01-29
The study, published in Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, resolves longstanding questions about when, and why, these iconic Australian marsupials diversified.
First author PhD researcher Clelia Gauthier, from QUT’s School of Biology and Environmental Science, said the researchers found that the kangaroo family tree expanded in two major bursts over the past nine million years.
“The first was during a late Miocene period of increasing dryness around 7-9 million years ago, and again in the Early Pliocene as grasslands began to emerge across the continent around 5-4.5 million years ago,” Ms Gauthier said.
“Our ...
Researchers develop soft biodegradable implants for long-distance and wide-angle sensing
2026-01-29
In a study published in Nature, a team led by Prof. SU Yewang from the Institute of Mechanics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, along with Dr. LI Shuang from Tsinghua University and Prof. YU Xinge from the City University of Hong Kong, developed a soft, biodegradable, wireless sensing device which can monitor multiple signals from inside the body over long distances (e.g., 16 cm), while maintaining accuracy across varying positions and angles.
Monitoring internal physiological signals is essential for effective ...
Early-life pollution leaves a multigenerational mark on fish skeletons
2026-01-29
By combining developmental assessments with advanced metabolomic profiling, the study reveals how early-life chemical stress rewires metabolism, disrupts growth programs, and leaves a hidden legacy of skeletal deformities.
Benzo[a]pyrene is a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon widely detected in aquatic environments worldwide. Although its toxicity to developing fish has been documented, most studies focus on immediate or single-generation effects. In natural ecosystems, however, early-life exposure often coincides with sensitive developmental windows, raising concerns about inherited impacts ...
Unlocking the genetic switches behind efficient feeding in aquaculture fish
2026-01-29
By integrating long-read and short-read transcriptomics with whole-genome resequencing, the team uncovered specific transcript variants and genetic variations linked to superior feed utilization, providing new molecular targets and more efficient ways for fish breeding.
Feed is the largest cost component in aquaculture and also a major source of environmental pressure, making improvements in feed efficiency is a central goal for sustainable fish production. Feed efficiency describes an animal’s ability to convert dietary nutrients into body mass, and even modest gains generating substantial economic ...
Fish liver self-defense: How autophagy helps pufferfish survive under the cold and copper stress
2026-01-29
By identifying and characterizing three key autophagy genes and tracking their responses under environmental stress, the study could help improve fish health management and support sustainable aquaculture.
Human activities and climate deterioration are increasingly altering aquatic ecosystems, leading to frequent disease outbreaks and heavy economic losses in fish farming. Takifugu fasciatus is prized for its high nutritional value and medicinal compounds, including tetrodotoxin and collagen. However, the species is highly sensitive to copper contamination and cold stress. Copper concentrations in summer waters can reach levels harmful ...
A lost world: Ancient cave reveals million-year-old wildlife
2026-01-29
Australian and New Zealand scientists have unearthed the remains of ancient wildlife in a cave near Waitomo on Aotearoa's North Island, the first time a large number of million-year-old fossils have been found – including an ancestor of the large flightless kākāpō parrot.
The discovery of fossils from 12 ancient bird species and four frog species has opened a rare window into how New Zealand looked about 1 million years ago.
It indicates that New Zealand’s ancient wildlife was significantly impacted by catastrophic climate changes and volcanic eruptions. This resulted in frequent extinctions and species replacements well before human arrival, according to new ...